Brooklyn, NY – The Eastward Expansion of High-Income Newcomers

Much has been written about the changes taking place in Brooklyn’s neighborhoods in the last decade. We dived into Census data to see how renters are impacting New York City‘s most populous borough. Judging by the explosion of new rentals construction in the post housing-crisis era, there’s no denying that the borough is attracting a new type of residents – higher-income renters.

In one decade Brooklyn saw a staggering 324% rise in affluent families moving here to rent. As of 2015, Brooklyn has over 52,000 high-income renter households, more than the city of Los Angeles, and more than double since 2011, when their numbers started to increase visibly. Moreover, the number of high-earning renters in NYC’s most populous borough is increasing at a much faster pace than the number of homeowners with comparable incomes, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau 2015 ACS.

By contrast, the rest of the borough’s neighborhoods lag behind. Brownsville, NE Flatbush, City Line, East New York and Highland Park have some of the highest numbers of low-income renters. Zip code 11212 (Brownsville) has the most renter households earning less than $50K/year. These and many other Central and Eastern Brooklyn neighborhoods are still experiencing low property values and high foreclosure rates, according to data from Property Shark. The lowest median home sale prices in Brooklyn are recorded in the Eastern zip codes 11207 and 11236 (in the $300,000’s), while the highest prices are in the Northwestern zip codes 11231, 11217, 11215, and 11201 (around $1 million), examples of the rift between Western and Eastern Brooklyn.

But the map reveals another interesting phenomenon: the gradual eastward and southward proliferation of high-income newcomers, taking advantage of the lower prices, expanding into Bed-Stuy, Crown Heights, Bensonhurst, Bath Beach, Gravesand and other once-overlooked areas of Brooklyn. Zip codes 11216 (Bedford-Stuyvesant) and 11214 (Bensonhurst / Bath Beach) are unrecognizable from just 5 years ago, with the number of high-earners now renting here four times higher than it was in 2011. A significant influx of wealthy renters over the last 4-5 years is also visible in 11237, 11211 and 11206.

If a decade ago there were just a handful of well-to-do families renting in Brooklyn, it has become clear by now that the floodgates are irreversibly opened and the demographics in the borough have undoubtedly changed.

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